Gargarensis

Gargarensis is a figure in Greek mythology. A cyclops and a descendant of the God of the Sea Poseidon, he was a servant of the Titan Kronos, and sought immortality by freeing him from Tartarus. He was assisted in his goals by the minotaur Kamos and the Egyptian pirate Kemsyt, but was ultimately slain by the Admiral of Atlantis Arkantos.

History
Gargarensis is said to be a descendant of the major god Poseidon in Greek mythology, and was a fierce cyclops that wielded a trident in battle. A cruel man, he sought to become immortal by assisting the Titan Kronos in escaping his imprisonment in Tartarus. Gargarensis was assisted by the minotaur Kamos and the Egyptian pirate Kemsyt, and Gargarensis ordered several pirate attacks across the Mediterranean Sea, one of which targeted the city of Atlantis itself around 1240 BC. Kemsyt stole Poseidon's Trident from the island but was chased down to the Balearic Isles, where Admiral Arkantos recovered the trident and defeated Gargarensis' minions, without knowing of his involvement.

When Kemsyt returned with news of the fall of Troy to the Hellenic forces of Arkantos, Gargarensis ordered Kamos to sack the port city of Ioklos, home to the centaur Chiron. Kamos' forces sacked the city while the army was absent and captured the acropolis and the surrounding areas, holding the garrison and Chiron hostage. Arkantos and the Greek prince Ajax returned to Ioklos to repair his ships (one of his three ships turned over and sunk while he was about to return to Atlantis from Troy), but when they arrived, an old man told them that bandits sacked the city while the soldiers were gone. Arkantos and Ajax commanded a small force of men that freed several imprisoned soldiers from the Egyptians, and using the powers of the gods (such as summoning tornadoes that destroyed buildings and consumed men, lightning that struck all enemy soldiers, and earthquakes that destroyed enemy buildings), he was able to destroy the acropolis and defeat the Egyptians.